xt7v6w967j0j https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7v6w967j0j/data/mets.xml Rothert, Otto Arthur, 1871-1956. 1921  books b92-64-27081012 English J.P. Morton, : Louisville, Ky. : Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. Cawein, Madison Julius, 1865-1914. Picturography of Madison Cawein  : a reprint of the first chapter of The story of a poet : Madison Cawein / by Otto A. Rothert. text Picturography of Madison Cawein  : a reprint of the first chapter of The story of a poet : Madison Cawein / by Otto A. Rothert. 1921 2002 true xt7v6w967j0j section xt7v6w967j0j 








A Picturography of


    Madison Cawein





              A Reprint
          Of the First Chapter of

THE STORY OF A POET: MADISON CAWEIN

                  BY
            OTTO A. ROTHERT
         Secretary of The Filson Club













       JOHN P. MORTON  COMPANY
                Incorporated
            LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY
                 1921


 


































    COPYRIGHT, 1921
BY OTTO A. ROTHERT


 






















There are fairies; verily;
       Verily;
For the old owl in the tree,
      Hollow tree,
He who maketh melody
For them tripping merrily,
      Told it me.
There are fairies; verily,
      There are fairies.


 
This page in the original text is blank.




 
                             I

          A PICTUROGRAPHY OF MADISON CAWEIN

    Madison Cawein as seen through sixty-three half-tone reproduc-
tions of photographs, paintings and documents bearing on his life and
works, which, with their explanatory texts, present a brief biography
of the poet.
                      LIST OF PICTURES
                                                        Page
Madison Cawein-Alberts, 1914 .............................    3
Dr. William Cawein-about i865            .       .         4
Mrs. William Cawein-about i865            .      .        5
The Herancour Coat of Arms             .        .          6
Site of Madison Cawein's Birthplace       .       .         7
South Fork of Hagrrod's Creek           .       .          8
The Old Stone Milk House, Rock Springs       .     .9  
The Cawein Cottage on the Indiana Knobs    .     ............ IO
View from the Cawein Cottage       ..............................  II
Madison Cawein and his Brothers-about I88I..                 2
Madison, Charles and Fred Cawein-about i884     .   .     13
Madison Cawein-i885 ....................................' 4
Madison Cawein-i887 ....................................      15
Commencement Program       second page ...................... i6
Commencement Program-third page .....    ..................  17
Diploma Received by Madison Cawein         .      .       i8
Louisville Male High School Building ......  ..................  i9
The Cawein Residence, High Avenue          .      .       20
The Cawein Residence, Market Street .....   ..................  21
The Newmarket Pool Room                .        .         22
Publishing House of John P. Morton  Company    .   .     23
The Babbit Home Fred W. Cawein            .       .       24
Ruins of Babbit's Mill-Wm. C. Cawein ..........   ............  25
A Beech Grove, near Brownsboro           .       .        26
An Old Home, near Brownsboro             .       .        27



1


 
                  Madison Cawein
                                                        Page
A Glimpse of the Indiana Knobs           .       .        28
Madison Cawein-about i893 ................ .............. 29
An Old Barn, near Jeffersontown-Fred W. Cawein .    ........... 30
Madison Cawein-i900 .................................... 31
Madison Cawein in the Woods-I902           .      .       32
Frog Pond, near Kenwood Hill .............................. 33
The Cawein Walk, Iroquois Park ............................. 34
The Bowl, Iroquois Park ................................... 35
The Enchanted Tree-Plaschke ............................. 36
The Gossamer Thread-Alberts .............................. 37
Bluets and Springtime in Iroquois Park-Patty Thum. .      38
Central Park and St. Paul's Church-Patty Thum...          39
The Announcement of Cawein's Wedding....                  40
Madison Cawein's Residence, Burnett Avenue    .     .     41
Mrs. Madison Cawein and Son-I904           .      .       42
Madison Cawein and Son-i905              .       .        43
Madison Cawein's Residence, St. James Court...              44
Madison Cawein's Library ................................. 45
Shawnee Park and the Ohio River          .       .        46
Cherokee Park and the Old Mill ............................. 47
Madison Cawein-xIio .................................... 48
Madison Cawein-i9I2 .................................... 49
Madison Cawein-King, 1912 .............................. 50
Madison Cawein-Plaschke, I912 ...........................      SI
Silver Loving Cup Presented to Madison Cawein   .   .     52
Madison Cawein, Bronze Bust-Roop, 1913 .       .................. 53
The St. James Apartment House            .       .        54
Unitarian Church and Louisville Free Public Library   .   .    55
Madison Cawein-King, 1914 .............................. 56
Grave of Madison Cawein ..................................     57
Death-mask of Madison Cawein-Roop, 1914 ................. 58
Facsimile of Two Pages of a Note Book       .     .       59
Facsimile of Unfinished Manuscript-first page ......  .........  60
Facsimile of Unfinished Manuscript-second page .....   ........  62
Facsimile of Unfinished Manuscript-third page .    .......     ..... 64
Facsimile of Manuscript of "Proem" ...........................  66
Facsimile of Manuscript of "Caverns ............. .............  67
The Thirty-six Books by Madison Cawein .........     ...........  68



9


 
A Picturography



                                  From an oil painting by J. Bernhard Alberta, 1914
    Madison Cawein was born March 23, i865, in Louisville, where
he lived nearly all of his life, and where he died December 8, 1914.
                               3




 
Madison Cawein



From a daguerreotype, about 1865



    Dr. William Cawein was thirty-eight years old when his son
Madison, the poet, was born. Dr. Cawein was a practical Herbalist.

                             4




 


A Picturography



From a daguerreotype, about 1865



    Mrs. William Cawein was twenty-six years old when her son
Madison, the poet, was born. She was interested in Spiritualism.



5




 
Madison Cawein



   The Herancour coat of arms. Dr. William Cawein was a de-
scendant of Jean de Herancour who left France in i685 for Muhlhofen,
near the Rhine, Germany. There the poet's father was born in i827.

                           6




 
A Picturography



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From a photograph by Hesse, 1920



      Madison Cawein was born in Louisville in a house that stood
opposite the Court House, and near Fifth Street.  On its site now
stands a brick building three stories high with a width of four windows.

                                             7



M




 
Madison Cawein



From a photograph by Fred W. Cawein, 1894



    When Cawein was nine years of age his parents moved to Rock
Springs, a resort east of Louisville, near Brownsboro, on a hill over-
looking the South Foi k of Harrod's Creek. Many years later the poet
said, "There for the first time I came in contact with wild nature."



8




 


A Picturography



From a photograph by Otto A. Rothert, 1920.



   The Rock Springs Hotel was managed by Cawein's father in i874
and I875. Nothing remains of this once well-known resort except an
old stone milk house from which there flows, now as then, a clear
water spring. The poet often returned to the Rock Springs country.

                               9




 


Madison Cawein



rrom a photograph by Utto A. notherr, 19Z0



    Cawein was in his eleventh, twelfth and thirteenth years when
his parents lived in a cottage on the Knobs, near New Albany, In-
diana. "Here I formed my great love for nature," said the poet in his
comments on his youth. In i879 the Caweins returned to Louisville.

                               10



I I




 
A Picturography



From a photograph by Hesse, 1920



    The Cawein cottage on the Knobs was in the center of a pano-
rama of beautiful landscapes. On the Kentucky side, in the dim
distance, can be seen Iroquois Park and Kenwood Hill.  In later
years the poet spent much time on these two hills near Louisville.



11



501




 
Madison Cawein



From a photograph, about 1881



    Madison Cawein and his three brothers. Madison, the young-
est, then aged about sixteen, is standing with his right hand on
William's shoulder; John is holding a hat, and back of him is Charles.

                              12




 
A Picturography



From a photograph, about 1884



    Madison Cawein, and his brother Charles, and cousin Fred W.
Cawein. Madison is standing in the center; Charles is at his right and
Fred is sitting at his left. Fred was one of the poet's closest friends.

                              13




 
Madison Cawein



From a ph/ol ogro ph by Dower, 1884



Cawein as he appeared during his last year as a high school boy.



14




 


A Picturography



From a photograph by Doerr, 1887



Cawein was twenty-two years old when he published his first book.



15




 


Madison Cawein



Facsimile of second page of Commencement Program



    Madison Cawein graduated from the Louisville Male High School
on June i I, i886. As shown on the Program, he was the Class Poet.

                              16




 
A Picturography



                                   Facsimile of third page of Commerncemen.t PtoTranm

    The Class of '86 consisted of thirteen bovs of whom Madison
Cawein was the oldest. All received the degree of Bachelor of Arts.



17




 
Madison Cawein



Greatly reduced facszmile of Diploma



    Madison Cawein's diploma was signed by Dr. F. C. Leber,
President, and Wm. J. Davis, Secretary, of the Louisville School
Board; and by R. H. Carothers, Principal and Prof. of English
Language; E. M. Murch, Prof. of Mathematics; H. W. Eaton, Prof.
of Physics and Chemistry; Hugo R. M. Moeller, Prof. of Modern
Languages; Marcus B. Allmond, Prof. of Ancient Languages; R. P.
Halleck, Prof. of Logic, Psychology and Rhetoric; W. T. St. Clair,
Adj. Prof.; and H. A. Gooch, Adj. Prof., the members of the faculty.

                             18




 
A Picturography



From a wood cut, about 1860



    In i886 the Louisville Male High Shool Building, Ninth and
Chestnut streets, appeared very much as it had many years before
Madison Cawein's school days. When Cawein attended this school
it represented the academic department of the University of Louisville.

                              19




 


Madison Cawein



From a photograph by Fred W. Cawein, about 1890



    Cawein lived on the south side of High Avenue, near Thirteenth
Street, from i882 to March I886. The house was torn down many
years ago. A little more than the front is shown on the extreme right.

                              20




 
A Picturography



From a photograph by Hesse, 1920



    Cawein made his home with his parents at the south-east corner of
Nineteenth and Market streets from i886 until June, 1903, when he was
married. He wrote nineteen of his books while living in this house.



21




 


Madison Cawein



From a photograph by Hesse, 1920



    In I887, and for about six years thereafter, Cawein was a cashier
in the Newmarket pool room, on Third Street, where betting on horse
races was the business transacted. The building is now occupied by
the Caxton Printing Company, indicated by the swinging sign.

                              22




 
A Picturography



From a photograph by Hesse, 1920



    Cawein's first book, Blooms of the Berry, was printed in October,
i887, by John P. Morton  Company, Main Street, which published
eleven of his thirty-six volumes, and, among other books, twenty-nine
of the Filson Club Publications-including this volume, Number 30.

                              23




 


Madison Cawein



From a water color by Fred W. Cawein, 1896



    During his high school years, and for many years thereafter,
Cawein often returned to the Brownsboro country where he was the
guest of the Babbits, whose old farm and home are near Rock Springs.
                              24




 
A Picturography



From a water color by Wm. C. Cawein, 1893



    In 1914, Cawein wrote: "The old water mill [Babbit's Mill] in the
Valley of Rock Springs has played an important part in my poems
of this locality, which I have celebrated in verse now for thirty years."

                              25




 
Madison Cawein



From a photograph by Fred W. Cawein, 1894



    Sometimes Cawein wandered alone through the beech groves,
over the fields, and along the streams in the Brownsboro country,
and sometimes he was accompanied by the Babbits and other friends.



26




 
A Picturography



From a photograph by Fred W. Cawein, 1894



    This picturesque old home near Brownsboro, and many other
old homes and human haunts elsewhere, appealed to Cawein no less
than did the forests and fields and the hills and the hollows.



27




 
Madison Cawein



From a photograph by Hesse, 1920



    Cawein made many pilgrimages to the Indiana Knobs, near New
Albany, where he had spent three years of his boyhood on a farm.

                            28




 


A Picturography



From a photograph, about 1893

WIN'    -'



    At times Cawein left Kentucky for his health or to promote his
art; but no place appealed to him as did the country around Louisville.
                               29




 


Madison Cawein



From a water color by Fred W. Cawein, 1893



    From i89i to 1903 the poet's father owned a small farm near
Jeffersontown and about twelve miles from Louisville. Its principal
features were an orchard, a vineyard and a garden. The poet often
visited the place, although the Caweins never used it as a home.
The largest building was an old barn, "low, swallow-swept and gray."



30




 
A Picturography



From a photograph by Fred W. Cawein, 1900



    The poet in his study. Cawein lived at Nineteenth and Market
streets during the first seventeen years of his literary career. Shortly
after publishing his first poems he was encouraged by the Louisville
press. His works attracted the attention of eminent critics in the
East and in England, and he soon gaincd an international reputation.

                                31




 


Madison Cawein



From a photograph by Fred W. Cawein, 1902



Madison Cawein spent much of his time in the heart of nature.



32




 


A Picturography



From a photograph by James S. Escoit, 19!2



The Old Frog Pond near Kenwood Hill was one of Cawein's haunts.

                           33




 
Madison Cawe in



From a photograph by Hesne, 1920



    What is now known as the Cawein Walk was, in Cawein's time,
and still is, a very secluded path in Iroquois Park. Its old stone
steps were one of the poet's favorite "solitary places" for writing.



34




 
A Picturography



From a photograph by Hesse, 1920



    Lying just beyond the southern end of the Cawein Walk is The
Bowl, one of many beautiful scenes in Iroquois Park. This large,
natural park-also known as Jacob Park-was an Elysium for Cawein.

                             35




 
AMad ison Cawe in



Froin an oil painting by Paul A. Plaschke, 1919



    "The Enchanted Tree," was painted in memory of Cawein who fre-
quently lingered under this old sycamore on Silver Creek, near New
Albany and the Silvcr Hills. For him it was anothcr haunt of Pan.



36




 
A Picturography



                                From an oil painting by J. Bernhard Alberts, 1918
    Cawein suggested to his friend J. Bernhard Alberts, in November,
1914: "If you'll paint a picture showing a faery wearing a necklace
of dewdrops on a gossamer thread, I'll write a poem on it." Cawein
died a few weeks later. In i9i8 the artist painted "The Gossamer
Thread," inspired by the Poet of the Fairies, and the Poet for Poets.
                                37



I (i !Lee",
M!




 
Madison Cawein



From an oil painting by Patty Thum, 1915



    "Bluets and Springtime in Iroquois Park," painted in memory of
Cawein who often went to Iroquois Park to see the bluets in bloom.

                              38




 
A Picturography



From an oil painting by Patty Thum, 1908



    "Central Park and St. Paul's Church" showing church in which
Mr. and Mrs. Cawein were married, and park near which they lived.

                             39




 


M a d i s o n



C a w e i n



Alt a tit v 444n IL 2tt Av4

      r       t    tf tnh frAttPthr

         tU slc 1 at i
                a

           a. t ttt  U ittirt t

           a Ii u thr koudh
     tn bAn I         ct tlrut

         t s tnU t tL hn



0:4t1E --tV -f



                                                Facsimile of Wedding Announcement



    Madison Julius Cawein and Gertrude Foster McKelvey were
married in Louisville, Kentucky, on Thursday morning, June 4, 1903.

                                  40




 


A Picturography



From a photograph by Heise, 1920



    Mr. and Mrs. Cawein lived on the north side of Burnett Ave-
nue, between First and Second streets, from June, 1903, to June, 1907.



41




 


Madison Cawe in



From a photograph by Doerr, 1904



    Mrs. Madison Cawein and son, Preston Hamilton Cawein. The
boy-born March i8, 1904-is the only child of Mr. and Mrs. Cawein.



42




 
A Picturography



From a photograph by Doerr, 1905



    Madison Cawein and son, Preston Hamilton Cawein. After the
death of the poet, the son's name was changed to Madison Cawein II.
                             43




 
Madison Cawein



From a photograph bay Hes8e, 1920



    Mr. and Mrs. Cawein lived in a beautiful residence-center of
picture in St. James Court from June, 1907, to January, I914.
This house, owned by them, is now the property of their son.



44




 
A Picturography



From Book News Monthly, November, 1909



    Cawein's
volumes. Its
Court. Every



private library contained about fifteen hundred
bay window over the porch faced the Fountain and
room in the house was expressive of his artistic taste.

                45




 
Madison Cawein



A p
From a photograph by James Speed, 1912



    Cawein frequently strolled through Shawnee Park, Louisville's
park on the Ohio River, watching the sunset behind the Indiana
Knobs, or the moonrise, or the river glittering to the stars.



46




 
A Picturography



From a photograph by James S. Escott, 1912



    Among Cawein's haunts in Cherokee Park was the ruins of
Ward's Old Corn Mill, on the Middle Fork of Beargrass Creek,
where Pan and Faun, and wood and water nymphs held rendezvous.



47




 


Madison Cawein



From a photograph by Steffens



el            r



48




 
A Picturography



    From a photograph by Cusick, 1912








49




 
Madison Cawein



Cartoon by Wyncie King, Louisville Herald, March 26, 191 Z



    Cawein as seen by Wyncie King when the many Louisville ad-
mirers of the poet presented him with a Silver Loving Cup on the -
twenty-fifth anniversary of the publication of his first volume of poems.



50




 
A Picturography



M: i: :;    lkW  
Mi BIef:Ap:0  
ofh A 30:: fa :S  



Cartoon by Paul A. Plaschke, Louisville Evening Post, March 30, 1912



    Cawein as seen by Paul A. Plaschke when the public presen-
tation of the Silver Loving Cup took place in the Louisville Free
Public Library on March 25, 1912, the poet's forty-seventh birthday.
                                 51



l




 
Madison Cawein



    The Silver Loving Cup presented to Madison Cawein, March 25,
1912, is ten and one-half inches high and bears the following inscription:
    To Madison Cawein by the Literati of Louisville under the
Auspices of the Louisville Literary Club.
    To Commemorate the Twenty-fifth Anniversary of the Publica-
tion of his First Book, Blooms of the Berry.
   March Twenty-fifth, i887-I912.

                             52




 
A Picturography



   The inscription on the Bronze Bust of Madison Cawein (by
James L. Roop) presented to the Louisville Free Public Library reads:
    Madison Cawein, a Kentucky Tribute to a Kentucky Poet,
Presented by The Louisville Literature Club, April 2j, i913.
                             53




 
Madison Cawein



From a photograph bh Hesse, 1920



   The Caweins, in January 1914, moved into the right hand
apartment on the third floor of the St. James Apartment House, in
St. James Court. There the poet died of apoplexy, December 8, 1914.
                             54




 
A Picturography



From a photograph by Hesse, 1920



    Cawein was buried from the First Unitarian Church, Fourth and
York streets. Opposite that church stands the Louisville Free Public
Library where the poet spent many hours reading books and magazines.



55




 
Madison Cawein



Cartoon by Wyncie King, Louisville Herald, December 9, 1914



    The Louisville press devoted many columns to Cawein at the
time of his illness and death. The Louisville Herald published this
cartoon by Wyncie King: "In Avalon, The Fairy Isle in Fairy Seas."

                                56




 
A Picturography



From a photograph by Hesse, 1920



    Cawein was buried in Cave Hill Cemetery, Louisville. At the
head of his grave is that of his father, marked by the tall stone.
At the side of his grave is that of his wife who died on April i6, i9i8.



57




 


Madison Cawein



Death-mask of Madisan Cawein, made by James L. Roop.



58




 
A Picturography



   Cawein filled many note-books, but as far as known, preserved
very few. The two pages here shown were printed, after some changes
were made, in i906, in Nature Notes and Impressions in Prose and Verse.

                             59




 
Madison Cawein



    Facsimile of the first of three pages in a composing note-book used
by Cawein when writing in the woods-probably the year I9I4. As
far as is known this poem, here shown in process, was never finished.
                             60


 
A Picturography



         Three kisses I remember
             That never come again
         That make June of December
             And hold me heart and brain
             (And of my soul remain-)
             (With longing and with pain)

         The first one hers who taught me
             To love against my will,
         That into knowledge brought me
             And bade me drink my fill
             (At life's wild running rill-)
             (Whose passion haunts me still)

         The second one was given














A transcription of the lines shown on the opposite page.

                      61




 


Madison Cawein



K



i




1 _   



4'



ZA



44

   i
2



Facsimile of the second of three pages in a note-book used by Cawein.

                          62



N     ,
9WR46;iR


 


A Picturography



              Upon my nuptial night
          (It bade me know of heaven
             The rapture and delight)
         The angel hosts of heaven
              Know no more of delight
          (It bore me up to heaven
             And bade me see the white
             Of dawn that on that height
             Still holds me with its light.
         The third one, filled with laughter
             And youth with joy abrim
          No kiss shall follow after
             To make my senses swim.














A transcription of the lines shown on the opposite page.
                       63




 
Madison Cawein



Facsimile of the third of three pages in a note-book used by Cawein.
                          64


 


A Picturography



       (Its joy can never dim-
       With joy that cannot dim-
       Young as the new moon's rim-
       Gold as the new moon's rim-
       One with the cherubim-
       Born of a moment's whim-
       No time can ever dim-
       Born of a girl's wild whim-
       Its joy can never dim)
















A transcription of the lines shown on the opposite page.
                      65




 
Madison Cawein



   Reduced facsimile of a completed manuscript. This poem was
first published as the Proem to Myth and Romance, i899, and a
few years later republished in two of Madison Cawein's other books.



66




 


A Picturography



    Reduced facsimile of a completed manuscript.  "Caverns" was
written in i898 and shortly thereafter printed in a newspaper or maga-
zine. It was later republished in three of Madison Cawein's books.



67




 
Madison Cawein



    The thirty-six books by Madison Cawein contain about 2700
poems; about 15oo are distinct originals and about 1200 are either
unchanged reprints or changed versions. His original versions com-
prise the greater part of twenty-five books.  The Poems of Madison
Cawein. in five large volumes, is a Compilation of his poems-in the
original or in a new version-written before 1907. Six books consist
chiefly of Selections he made from previous volumes. The Compila-
tion and the various Selections cause many of his poems-some in the
original, others in a changed version-to appear two or more times.



68




 
BOOKS BY MADISON CAWEIN



I BLOOMS OF THE BERRY. 202 pages ..................
2 THE TRIUMPH OF MUSIC. I7I pages................
3 ACCOLON OF GAUL. 164 pages......................
4 LYRICS AND IDYLS. I94 pages......................
5 DAYS AND DREAMS. 173 pages.
6 MOODS AND MEMORIES. 310 pages.................
7 RED LEAVES AND ROSES. 205 pages.
8 POEMS OF NATURE AND LOVE. 211 pages............
9 INTIMATIONS OF THE BEAUTIFUL. 208 pages..........
IO THE WHITE SNAKE. 79 pages......................
I I UNDERTONES. 65 pages...........................
12 THE GARDEN OF DREAMS. 123 pages................
13 SHAPES AND SHADOWS. 77 pages...................
14 IDYLLIC MONOLOGUES. io6 pages..................
15 MYTH AND ROMANCE. 85 pages....................
16 ONE DAY AND ANOTHER. io8 pages.................
17 WEEDS BY THE WALL. 94 pages....................
i8 KENTUCKY POEMS. 264 pages......................
i9 A VOICE ON THE WIND. 73 pages...................
20 THE VALE OF TEMPE. 274 pages...................



.1...i887
.1...I888
.1...I889
.1...I890
.1...i89i
....I892
.   1993
.    ......893
.1 894
.1.......895
.1......896
..... I896
..... I898
..... I898
..... I899
.....1901
.....1901
.....1902
.....1902
..... I905



2I NATURE NOTES AND IMPRESSIONS. 311 pages ........     I906
22 VOLUME   I, THE POEMS OF MADISON CAWEIN. 493 pages. .1907
23 VOLUME  II, THE POEMS OF MADISON CAWEIN. 530 pages. .1907
24 VOLUME III, THE POEMS OF MADISON CAWEIN. 483 pages. .1907
25 VOLUME IV, THE POEMS OF MADISON CAWEIN. 439 pages.. 1907
26 VOLUME  V, THE POEMS OF MADISON CAWEIN. 482 pages.. 1907
27 ODE. . . MASSACHUSETTS BAY COLONY. 25 pages .        I908
28 NEW POEMS. 248 pages ................................ o909
29 THE GIANT AND THE STAR. 173 pages ....99 .......... I I
30 THE SHADOW GARDEN AND OTHER PLAYS. 259 pages .    1I9IO
31 POEMS BY MADISON CAWEIN. 298 pages.              I91I
32 THE POET, THE FOOL AND THE FAERIES. 259 pages .     1912
33 THE REPUBLIC. 98 pages.                          1913
34 MINIONS OF THE MOON. I31 pages.                  I913
35 THE POET AND NATURE AND THE MORNING ROAD. 241 pages. 1914
36 THE CUP OF COMUS. 96 pages.                      I9I5



 b92-64-27081012

Electronic reproduction. 2002. (Beyond the shelf, serving historic Kentuckiana through virtual access (IMLS LG-03-02-0012-02) ; These pages may be freely searched and displayed. Permission must be received for subsequent distribution in print or electronically.

Picturography of Madison Cawein : a reprint of the first chapter of The story of a poet : Madison Cawein / by Otto A. Rothert. Rothert, Otto Arthur, 1871-1956. J.P. Morton, Louisville, Ky. : 1921.

68 p. : ill. ; 23 cm.

Coleman

Autographed by author.

Microfilm. Atlanta, Ga. : SOLINET, 1992. 1 microfilm reel ; 35 mm. (SOLINET/ASERL Cooperative Microfilming Project (NEH PS-20317) ; SOL MN02788.05 KUK)

Printing Master B92-64.

IMLS

This electronic text file was created by Optical Character Recognition (OCR). No corrections have been made to the OCR-ed text and no editing has been done to the content of the original document. Encoding has been done through an automated process using the recommendations for Level 1 of the TEI in Libraries Guidelines. Digital page images are linked to the text file.

Cawein, Madison Julius, 1865-1914.

A Picturography of Madison Cawein A Reprint Of the First Chapter of THE STORY OF A POET: MADISON CAWEIN BY OTTO A. ROTHERT Secretary of The Filson Club JOHN P. MORTON COMPANY Incorporated LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY 1921

COPYRIGHT, 1921 BY OTTO A. ROTHERT

There are fairies; verily; Verily; For the old owl in the tree, Hollow tree, He who maketh melody For them tripping merrily, Told it me. There are fairies; verily, There are fairies.

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I A PICTUROGRAPHY OF MADISON CAWEIN Madison Cawein as seen through sixty-three half-tone reproduc- tions of photographs, paintings and documents bearing on his life and works, which, with their explanatory texts, present a brief biography of the poet. LIST OF PICTURES Page Madison Cawein-Alberts, 1914 ............................. 3 Dr. William Cawein-about i865 . . 4 Mrs. William Cawein-about i865 . . 5 The Herancour Coat of Arms . . 6 Site of Madison Cawein's Birthplace . . 7 South Fork of Hagrrod's Creek . . 8 The Old Stone Milk House, Rock Springs . .9 The Cawein Cottage on the Indiana Knobs . ............ IO View from the Cawein Cottage .............................. II Madison Cawein and his Brothers-about I88I.. 2 Madison, Charles and Fred Cawein-about i884 . . 13 Madison Cawein-i885 ....................................' 4 Madison Cawein-i887 .................................... 15 Commencement Program second page ...................... i6 Commencement Program-third page ..... .................. 17 Diploma Received by Madison Cawein . . i8 Louisville Male High School Building ...... .................. i9 The Cawein Residence, High Avenue . . 20 The Cawein Residence, Market Street ..... .................. 21 The Newmarket Pool Room . . 22 Publishing House of John P. Morton Company . . 23 The Babbit Home Fred W. Cawein